VOLUNTEER HANDBOOK - volunteering.com.au Handbook The Centre for Volunteering Orientation Pack Staff Handbook Page 3 of 22 Board of Directors Chairperson Valerie Hoogstad
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The Centre for Volunteering Level 3, 40 Gloucester Street, The Rocks NSW 2000 T 02 9261 3600
A Member is a not-for-profit organisation or an individual, who is a financial member of
The Centre for Volunteering,
Position Description
The Position Description is the document detailing the work to be performed by a
given position as it is expected to be performed after orientation and training. It also
lists the skills, qualifications, experience and attributes required of a successful job
candidate.
Staff
A member of staff is any person who performs work for or under the direction of The
Centre for Volunteering, whether as a paid employee or a volunteer, whether full-
time, part-time, or casual or.
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Our Vision, Mission and Objectives Our Vision is “To promote, support and facilitate volunteering through the
engagement and representation of individuals and organisations for the benefit of
communities across NSW”
Our Mission is “Setting the standard for volunteering”. We promote and support
volunteering and community participation. Through our leadership and experience in
delivering services in NSW and throughout Australia, we connect people and
organisations in order to enrich the community. The Centre for Volunteering also
supports and promotes other forms of citizen participation.
Our Key Objectives are advocacy and communications through the promotion,
support and recognition of volunteers and volunteering at the individual, community
and national levels; education and capacity building by facilitating excellence and
enabling best practice in volunteering and volunteer management; collaboration to
strengthen membership and cooperation across all volunteer engaging organisations
to enhance relationships and grow output and to embody good governance
principles.
What We Do
The Centre for Volunteering is the umbrella body for not-for-profit organisations
including Volunteering NSW and the School of Volunteer Management. Volunteering
NSW has a 40-year history of serving the community. The Centre undertakes special
projects which support and promote volunteering and are of national significance.
This includes seminars, good citizenship projects, awards and corporate-community
engagement projects.
Volunteering NSW is the peak body for volunteering in New South Wales and has a
membership consisting of not-for-profit organisations and individuals, as well as
corporate clients and partners, government clients, funders and stakeholders. It
delivers volunteer services such as referring volunteers to not-for-profit organisations,
conducting school programs, promoting volunteer opportunities, and delivering
benefits to member organisations.
The School of Volunteer Management is a Registered Training Organisation (RTO) and
is administered under RTO requirements and is compliant with the Australian Quality
Training Framework (AQTF). It conducts diploma, certificate, short courses and
workshops to improve the quality and capacity of management in the not-for-profit
sector as well as the for profit organisations. This includes courses in business,
fundraising and volunteer management.
Our Programs
The Centre for Volunteering delivers a wide array of services, programs and projects
that encourage and support the aims and objectives of volunteerism in New South
Wales. The programs and projects delivered vary in focus, client group, funding source
and time frame.
A list of current programs is attached at Appendix 3
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Overview The Centre places great emphasis on creating strong, respectful internal and external
relationships focussed on enhancing our own and others’ capabilities.
We support each other, work together and recognise that we all play a vital
role in creating a community we can all be proud of.
We actively build relationships based on trust, honesty, respect, integrity,
compassion.
We understand, recognise, participate in and promote fairness and equity.
We acknowledge that building relationships takes time and requires hard work,
resources, effective communication, reflection and active engagement.
Our guiding principles are:
to strengthen and enhance communities,
to improve and enrich individuals lives,
to assist communities to flourish,
to ignite community spirit,
to enhance community wellbeing, and
to create sustainable communities.
The Centre meets its obligations and strives to fulfil its mission with the help of policies
and procedures. We understand it can be difficult to know all of our policies. However,
employees and volunteers are obliged to familiarise themselves with the key policies
outlined here, and with the developing set of policies and procedures in the ‘Policies
& Procedures Folder’ located on the computer network
If you have any doubts in relation to any procedure, please consult this handbook or
the complete policies within the ‘Policies & Procedures Folder’.
What you need to know
As a volunteer you have the right:
to work in a healthy and safe environment,
to be interviewed and engaged in accordance with equal opportunity and
anti-discrimination legislation,
to be adequately covered by insurance,
to be given accurate and truthful information about the organisation for which
you are working,
to be reimbursed for out of pocket expenses,
to be given a copy of the organisation’s volunteer policy and any other policy
that may affect your work,
not to fill a position previously held by a paid worker,
not to do the work of paid staff during industrial disputes,
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to have a job description and agreed working hours,
to have access to a grievance procedures,
to be provided with orientation to the organisation,
to have your confidential and personal information dealt with in accordance
with the provisions of the Privacy Act; and
to be provided with sufficient training to do your job.
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The Principles of Volunteering Volunteering benefits the community and the volunteer,
Volunteer work is unpaid,
Volunteering is always a matter of choice,
Volunteering is a legitimate way in which citizens can participate in the
activities of their community,
Volunteering is a vehicle for individuals or groups to address human,
environmental and social needs,
Volunteering is an activity performed in the not for profit sector,
Volunteers do not replace paid workers nor constitute a threat to the job
security of paid workers,
Volunteering respects the rights, dignity and culture of others; and
Volunteering promotes human rights and equality.
Code of Conduct
The Code of Conduct helps to define and develop policies and procedures in
keeping with legal requirements and our ethical values of excellence, integrity,
respect, collaboration, inclusiveness, and responsibility.
All staff have a responsibility to comply with legislation, policy, procedures and the
Code of Conduct for The Centre. Staff should perform their duties effectively, provide
impartial, accurate advice and act in a manner that promotes a productive and
harmonious working environment.
The Code of Conduct requires that, in the course of their employment or
engagement, employees and volunteers of The Centre must:
Behave honestly and with integrity,
Act with due care and diligence,
Treat everyone with respect and courtesy and without harassment,
Comply with all applicable Australian laws,
Use The Centre’s property and money efficiently, carefully and honestly with
due authorisation and without misapplication and/or misappropriation,
Comply with any lawful or reasonable direction given by a person with the
authority to give that direction,
Maintain appropriate confidentiality in relation to dealings with Board
members, the CEO, or Senior Managers,
Disclose, and take steps to avoid, any conflicts of interest whether real or
apparent,
Behave in a way that upholds the values, integrity and reputation of The
Centre for Volunteering,
Not provide false or misleading information,
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Not make improper use of internal information or disclose an
employee's status, salary, power or authority in order to gain, or seek to gain,
an advantage for the employee/volunteer or for any other person,
At all times behave in a way that upholds the core values of the Centre for
Volunteering and
While on duty externally, interstate or overseas, at all times behave in a way
that upholds the good reputation of The Centre and its departments.
Breaches of the Code of Conduct may relate to specific breaches of policies and
procedures and may attract disciplinary action. Disciplinary action may include
investigation, removal of privileges or access, repayment of monies, referral to Police
in the case of unlawful behaviour, and termination of employment/engagement.
The Centre for Volunteering fosters the values of openness, honesty, tolerance, fairness
and responsibility in social matters.
The Centre is a complex organisation comprising diverse groups that have different
relationships to one another. It is essential in such a community that all members
recognise and respect not only their own rights and responsibilities, but also the rights
and responsibilities of other members of the community and those of The Centre itself.
Key Volunteer Policies
We currently have key policies covering recruitment and selection, rights and
obligations of staff and volunteer-specific matters. These are continually being
developed and/or updated and upon completion are located in the Policies and
Procedures folder.
Key Work Health & Safety Requirements
This refers to policies, procedures and regulations which aim to ensure the wellbeing of
employees and volunteers who undertake work at or for The Centre for Volunteering.
The key Work Health & Safety (WH&S) requirements are:
All staff and volunteers must adhere to the Work Health & Safety Policy, a hard
copy of which is available from the Manager, Office and People,
All staff and volunteers are to make themselves familiar with the Emergency
Procedures applicable to Level 3, 40 Gloucester Street, Sydney,
If any staff member or volunteer is concerned in relation to a WH&S issue in the
workplace, they should raise the matter immediately with the Manager, Office
and People,
The Centre’s Manager, Office and People is responsible for the WH&S process
which addresses any issues raised, promptly, develops procedures and
documents such procedures. The Manager, Office and People also
communicate WH&S policies and procedures to staff on a regular basis,
All volunteers and staff should be familiar with the current procedures for the
safe use of workstations, equipment, housekeeping, and purchasing.
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Access and use of Facilities & Rooms The Centre has facilities and equipment including meeting rooms, training rooms,
laptops and projector for use by the organisation and its staff. Booking and use of
facilities by paid employees are subject to conditions.
The meeting and training rooms are subject to stringent reporting requirements by the
School of Volunteer Management as part of their Registered Training Organisation
status. To ensure these obligations are met, booking procedures are to be strictly be
adhered to.
From time to time, external organisations may be granted permission to access these
services for a fee. Staff and volunteers should avoid agreeing or making commitments
to requests, and should avoid quoting an ad hoc fee for services. All enquiries must be
directed to the Events Manager who has the full procedures for booking rooms. Please
refer to the Policies and Procedures Folder for further details.
Staff Calendar and Room Bookings
Staff may book rooms for meetings (Boardroom, Break Room and Training Room).
Please check the shared staff calendar via Outlook. If a room has not been booked
by someone else, then staff are free to book it.
In addition to signing in and out at reception, please enter your whereabouts in the
shared calendar in Outlook (e.g. external meetings). This lets the reception team know
how to direct callers, i.e. they know when they need to take messages for you.
Kitchen Facilities
The facilities in the kitchen are for everyone to use, and everyone should clean up
after themselves. Please do not leave any cutlery or dishes on the sink. All used cutlery
and crockery should be stacked in the dishwasher. Staff share the responsibility of
emptying the dishwasher and putting away the contents after a wash cycle.
There are glasses and cups set aside for meetings and guests in the break room
cupboard. Where a staff member has invited guest/s for a meeting, that staff member
will be responsible for setting up the meeting room (i.e. water, glasses, tea and coffee)
and for leaving the room in a clean state when the meeting has concluded.
Waste disposal
The red top recycling bin located by the VRS is for all general, non-sensitive
paper recycling, including cardboard and boxes. Boxes should be collapsed
and placed in the bin. Please note: plastic covers and staples should not be
left on paper based materials to be recycled.
The blue-top bin located by the VRS is for sensitive documents which are to be
to be disposed of securely. Documents may be placed into the bin through the
slot in the lid of the bin. Should you require bulk disposal of sensitive documents,
please ask the Manager, Office and People for the key to the locked top.
Printer cartridges should be placed in the ‘Planet Ark’ box next to ITC Branch,
located in the lower level area of the office.
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General waste should be disposed of in the bin allocated to your
workstation, or one of the bins in the kitchen. The contracted cleaners empty
bins every Wednesday.
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Access and use of ITC, Internet & Email
Telephone and IT Assistance
Please see the Telephone Extension List for information on telephone procedures.
This organisation has a number of information management and technology assets in
place to assist staff in carrying out their work efficiently. As such, The Centre has a
policy on the proper use of and access to ITC resources including Internet and email.
This is contained in the Policies and Procedures Folder located in the G: drive.
The key policies and procedures to be aware of are:
Unlawful and acceptable use of ITC resources outlines acts that are criminal in
nature and may be referred to the authorities,
Staff or volunteers are prohibited from copying or removing software owned by
The Centre. The policy covers the process staff must follow should they request
the acquisition of new software by the organisation,
Requesting PC access applies to the process of connecting new staff to the
network and general limitations on access to the network,
Use of the Internet explains appropriate, inappropriate, illegal and
unacceptable use of the internet at The Centre. This policy also covers the
consequences for such breaches,
The use of Centre resources for personal profit or gain is strictly prohibited.
Technical assistance may be sought from the ITC Branch,
Security explains the minimum that staff need to know about protecting the
Centre’s systems against security breaches, SPAM and viruses as well as
protecting the privacy of logins and passwords. This policy also covers the
consequences for breaches of security provisions, and
Ownership and removal of documents stipulates the Centre’s copyright over
any material developed by staff or volunteers.
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Phone Policy and Etiquette
Reception, Phone and Email
Staff and volunteers working on reception are requested to:
Always act politely and greet new arrivals in a friendly manner,
Attempt to diffuse any potentially difficult situation/person by using a calm and
friendly manner and using an even tone of voice, as this has been shown to
reduce the incidence of confrontations in customer service environments,
Should your efforts to ameliorate the situation not be effective, ask the person
to be seated and notify your manager immediately,
You should always answer phone calls and greet guests at the front desk if the
reception is unattended,
Where the guest has an appointment with a staff member, you should
immediately advise them of the arrival of their guest,
Employees are not permitted to read extraneous materials such as magazines,
papers or books while attending the reception. The computer located at that
desk should be used to continue with their usual work and
Volunteers are requested to ask their line manager if there is any office work
they can assist with while attending at reception.
Personal use
Interstate calls are permitted only for work purposes. International calls are restricted
to certain managers only. Please use your mobile phone for personal calls and ensure
that it is set to ‘meeting’ or ‘vibrate’ so as not to disturb others in the office with loud or
inappropriate ringtones.
Answering the phone
Please answer the phone if you are attending the reception phone with the following
phrase “Good Morning/Afternoon, The Centre for Volunteering, how may I help you?”
Your tone should be warm, calm and professional. If you are at your desk you should
use the greeting “Hello, this is XYZ speaking”.
Dealing with difficulties
Remember that that if you cannot understand the person speaking, it is equally
possible that they too, do not understand or comprehend what you are saying.
Therefore, avoid becoming frustrated where you can. Give the caller time to digest
the information you have provided and if required, paraphrase the salient points.
Don’t be pressured to hurry a call by other incoming calls. Where you need to answer
other calls, politely ask the original caller to please hold the line while you attend to
the new call or offer to call them back. Do not answer queries with “I think so”. You
should clarify your answers and provide an authoritative answer where possible or call
them back with the correct information.
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Taking messages
In general, when managers or staff are engaged in meetings or discussions, they
should not be interrupted. Reception can be asked to take messages for staff
members who are attending scheduled meetings. Where the caller indicates that the
call relates to a matter of urgency, the call should be forwarded to the staff member.
Messages should be taken accurately and should include the correct spelling of the
caller’s name, a correct phone number, and a short message. This information should
be emailed to the staff member immediately.
Voice Mail Your direct line to distribute to regular contacts is 02 8295 70+ the last two digits of your extension number. (e.g. if your extension is 104 your direct line is 8295 7004)
Transferring a call
Dial the extension number you wish to transfer the call to and then press ‘transfer’
Email policy
Use of email should be limited as far as possible to work matters only. Only
essential work-based information should be stored in your Inbox or email
folders,
Sending harassing, obscene and/or other threatening messages, unsolicited
junk mail (SPAM), “for profit” messages or chain letters, pornography of any
kind or explicit information or explicit graphics of any kind attracts disciplinary
action and may lead to dismissal,
There are acceptable, unacceptable and illegal uses of email. These are
detailed within the Policies & Procedures Folder in G:\.
DO NOT open attachments from unknown/unverified sources. Please advise ITC
branch if you have queries in relation to attachments or emails generally.
Email etiquette
You should respond to email messages containing important information or
requests from your manager or another staff member as soon as possible,
Email does not replace face-to-face communication with colleagues or
clients,
E-mail messages represent not just you as an individual but also the
organisation and therefore, they should always be respectful of the addressee
as well as The Centre for Volunteering,
Emails should address the issue, not the addressee, use appropriate tone and
language. You should support your point/s with a clearly argued position
based on facts.
Emails which are badly expressed, poorly constructed, misleading, not
proofread prior to sending or are ineffective can cause confusion and lead to
an unnecessary exchange of correspondence which can, in turn, lead to loss
of time and productivity as well as frustration,
Any matter which requires detailed consideration and/or negotiation should
be discussed in person or during scheduled meetings.
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Email messages should not include graphics unless you are asking
for feedback on the file,
Capital letters should be avoided. This is considered ‘SHOUTING’,
You should report any unlawful or offensive content to your manager for further
action by the ITC branch, or management,
If you receive SPAM or junk mail – do not click on any links in the email message
and do not reply. Add it to your ‘Junk Mail’ Filter and delete the message
immediately.
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Routine Matters
Restrooms
Restrooms for The Centre are located in the foyer area directly across from the lifts.
Hours of Operation
Office hours are from 9 am to 5 pm Monday to Friday, with reception switchboard
hours from 10 am to 4 pm Monday to Friday.
Transport to Gloucester/Cambridge Street
The office is located in The Rocks, with the closest stations being Circular Quay and
Wynyard. There are two main access points to 40 Gloucester Street. One route is by
entering at the ground floor from the corner of Gloucester and Cumberland streets,
across from the Australian Hotel. The other entry point is via Cambridge Street,
entering through number 11 Cambridge Street (next to Nakashima Restaurant) and
accessing the office by taking the lift up to level 3.
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Walking directions from Circular Quay
Walking directions from Wynyard
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Further detailed directions can be found via the website:
http://volunteering.com.au/contact_us.asp
Nearby banks, shops and post offices
The closet post office is located on Pitt Street towards Circular Quay station. NAB is at
255 George Street; Westpac is on the corner of Pitt and Bridge Streets, just a little
further than the Post Office. There is a large convenience store down stairs via Argyle
Street in the Clock Tower Centre. The nearest Post Box is located on George Street via
Argyle Street. The closest ATM is located in the Arcade on Playfair Street, just off Argyle